CORRECT: M&I's Worst Loans To See Peak Losses In 2010
October 06 2009 - 10:14AM
Dow Jones News
Marshall & Ilsley Corp. (MI) said Tuesday that losses from
its most troubled portfolios of loans will peak in the first or
second quarter of 2010. The Milwaukee-based bank also disclosed
some unexpected losses, most notably from loans to other troubled
banks, and said its third quarter results will miss
expectations.
M&I said bad loans fell in the third quarter for the first
time on a sequential basis in four years, a possible sign that the
credit woes affecting banks may have peaked.
But M&I executives also made clear that the bank expects
more pain from the economy and depressed housing market.
"There simply are an inadequate number of consistent trends to
reinforce the sentiments that the economy is stabilizing and better
times are within sight," said President and Chief Executive Mark
Furlong.
Shares in M&I were recently down 3% to $7.70 in composite
trading.
The company said it projects a quarterly loss wider than
analysts' expectations amid a nearly $185 million provision for
souring loans to other bank holding companies.
Those loans became troubled in part because some of those bank
borrowers drew enforcement actions from regulators, the bank told
Dow Jones Newswires.
Wisconsin's largest bank has cut costs and jobs and slashed its
dividend to preserve cash. It has struggled with heavy exposure to
some of the most troubled housing markets, including Arizona and
Florida, and has faced acute losses from loans for housing
developments.
Net charge-offs, or permanent losses, from those Arizona and
Florida loans will peak in the first half of next year, the bank
said.
The company said Tuesday it expected nonperforming loans to fall
$170 million from the second quarter, or 4.9% of total loans. It
also sees early stage delinquencies down $220 million, or 20%,
sequentially, putting them at the lowest level in six quarters.
The company reiterated its forecast for a loan-loss provision of
$390 million to $400 million, excluding nearly $185 million for
holding-company loans. That compares with the $468.2 million in the
second quarter and $155 million a year earlier. Marshall &
Ilsley said the special provision was due to new regulations on
bank holding companies.
-By Marshall Eckblad and Kevin Kingsbury, Dow Jones Newswires;
212-416-2156; kevin.kingsbury@dowjones.com